
Text -- Proverbs 19:24 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Pro 19:24
To feed himself; he expects that the meat should drop into his mouth.
JFB -> Pro 19:24
JFB: Pro 19:24 - -- Literally, a wide dish in which the hand was plunged in eating (Mat 26:23). Compare Pro 26:15, the sentiment expressed with equal irony and less exagg...
Clarke -> Pro 19:24
Clarke: Pro 19:24 - -- A slothful man hideth his hand in his bosom - Is too lazy to feed himself, If he dip his hand once in the dish, he is too lazy to put it in a second...
A slothful man hideth his hand in his bosom - Is too lazy to feed himself, If he dip his hand once in the dish, he is too lazy to put it in a second time. It is a strange case that a man, through his excessive slothfulness, would rather starve than put himself to the trouble to eat.
TSK -> Pro 19:24
TSK: Pro 19:24 - -- Pro 19:15, Pro 6:9, Pro 6:10, Pro 12:27, Pro 15:19, Pro 24:30-34, Pro 26:13-16; Psa 74:11

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Pro 19:24
Barnes: Pro 19:24 - -- Hideth his hand in his bosom - Better, dippeth his hand in the dish (compare 2Ki 21:13). The scene brought before us is that of an Eastern feas...
Poole -> Pro 19:24
Poole: Pro 19:24 - -- Hideth his hand in his bosom either to keep it warm in cold weather; or to give it rest, being loth to oppress it with the labour of any action. It i...
Hideth his hand in his bosom either to keep it warm in cold weather; or to give it rest, being loth to oppress it with the labour of any action. It is a sarcastical hyperbole.
Will not so much as bring it to his mouth again to wit, to feed himself; he expects that the meat should drop into his mouth.
Gill -> Pro 19:24
Gill: Pro 19:24 - -- A slothful man hideth his hand in his bosom,.... In cold weather to keep it warm, and at other times, as unwilling to use it in labour; it is the pr...
A slothful man hideth his hand in his bosom,.... In cold weather to keep it warm, and at other times, as unwilling to use it in labour; it is the proper posture and just attitude of a slothful man. The word for "bosom" is sometimes used for a "pot" or "platter" u; and then the sense is, that he puts his hands under a pot over a fire to warm them; or in one removed at some distance from the fire, as Jarchi; or rather it may signify his putting his hand into a plate of food, and yet so slothful, as it follows,
and will not so much as bring it to his mouth again; so sluggish, that he will rather starve than be at the pains to feed himself; he will not take his hand out of his bosom, to take food out of the dish to feed himself with; and even when his hand is in the dish, he will not take it from thence again, and lift it to his mouth; an hyperbolical expression. Gussetius w thinks, it may have respect to such slothful men, who are careless and negligent to their souls; who, though they have the holy Scriptures in their hands, like a vessel full of wholesome food for the soul, yet will not make use of the least mite out of them, that they may receive eternal life.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
MHCC -> Pro 19:24
MHCC: Pro 19:24 - --Indolence, when indulged, so grows upon people, that they have no heart to do the most needful things for themselves.
Matthew Henry -> Pro 19:24
Matthew Henry: Pro 19:24 - -- A sluggard is here exposed as a fool, for, 1. All his care is to save himself from labour and cold. See his posture: He hides his hand in his bosom...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Pro 19:24
Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 19:24 - --
24 The slothful hath thrust his hand into the dish;
He bringeth it not again to his mouth.
This proverb is repeated in a different form, Pro 26:15...
Constable -> Pro 10:1--22:17; Pro 19:1--22:17
Constable: Pro 10:1--22:17 - --II. COUPLETS EXPRESSING WISDOM 10:1--22:16
Chapters 1-9, as we have seen, contain discourses that Solomon eviden...
